TODD SEAVEY
author of Libertarianism for Beginners and writer of/speaker about many other things

Monday, June 24, 2013

Don’t Look Down While Using the System, Man! (plus Troll Stroll photos)

Fittingly, as this blog’s “Month of Systems” reaches its
final week and America waits to see if marriage will be legally redefined, I find myself looking to recruit someone to
argue the “nurture” side of a July 9 debate on whether sex roles are
primarily a product of nature or nurture (arguing “nature” will be evolutionary
psychology professor and fine human specimen Diana Fleischman).

I may have a lead
on a transgender anthropologist interested in arguing the “nurture” side (as
you might imagine), but one hates to count one’s chicks, etc.

Biology and mainstream culture both tend to be treated as
straitjackets in some debates of this sort -- but you might argue that
science/biology makes both mainstream culture and more subjective forms of
radicalism look like shifting and arbitrary things by comparison.

I blogged in the previous entry, from my own skeptical
perspective, about the mystical/spiritual outlook being at times a form of
open-mindedness.Of course, the main
problem with views adopted from gut instinct or aesthetic preference is that
they will tend to be arbitrary and nonetheless to get asserted as if descriptive of external
reality.

And so, for one thing, we find ourselves awaiting word from
the Supreme Court this week about whether gay people can marry, largely because
some people think God says they can’t -- though that’s admittedly making a long
story I’m not terribly interested in short, etc.

But I picked up a couple religion-inflected free magazines
at a Columbia conference on marriage where my friend Dawn Eden spoke -- an
issue each of Touchstone
(January/February 2013) and the conservative Intercollegiate Studies
Institute’s mostly-sane Intercollegiate
Review (Spring 2013) -- and they’re both reminders that mainstream religious
claims, just like seemingly-odd mystical or paranormal claims, are at least
usually footnotes to a much larger system that at least looks more harmonious
taken as a whole than it does when examined only for its oddest or most
offensive footnotes.

Further, both magazines are conscious of defending an entire
worldview against rivals such as liberalism -- and that can have some
interesting side effects such as a Touchstone article contrasting the optimism
of C.S. Lewis’s sci-fi novels (less familiar, perhaps, than his Narnia
fantasies) and H.P. Lovercraft’s horror.

As I’d noticed myself, there are many similarities in tone
and approach between the two -- lots of ominous intrusions from
barely-comprehensible higher dimensions in a very early-twentieth-century style
-- but in the end Lewis thinks the universe is structured this way because
someone up there likes you, whereas Lovecraft’s universe is an unfeeling,
almost sociopathic void in which you don’t matter.In the era of eugenics’ greatest popularity,
Lovecraft was both an atheist and a bit of a fascist, and not too happy about
either role.(Not everyone is a
well-adjusted skeptic and biotech enthusiast like me.)

But the ultimately arbitrary (or at least
psychology-dependent) nature of spiritual claims can lead to much weirder
places than overall optimism, pessimism, or limited conceptions about the
nature of tradition.

I only just learned that an online acquaintance of mine --
when not being an underwear model, rock singer, libertarian, and yoga
instructor -- is also a

believer in reincarnation who thinks she has past
lives.Start thinking like that, and
next thing you know you’re leaping to conclusions such as thinking a child who
talks about WWII must be a reincarnated fighter pilot instead of merely having
been to a museum at an early age (to take one very real, and rather stupid,
case that got unwarranted national press attention despite being very easily
explained with a bit more digging).

So much of this gets back to how people feel about whole
systems rather than individual claims, though (meaning that the individual
claims may never be inspected at all).If they’re happy (for now) with their organic produce, hippie headbands,
and time spent communing with animals, they may not want to rock the boat by
asking whether quartz crystals actually ward off cancer.If they’re happy (for now) with their
churches, Bibles, and priests, they may not want to rock the boat by asking
whether Heaven exists or restricting marriage to one model might make life very
difficult for some.

People are (of necessity) mentally lazy and prefer big
“package deals” when it comes to philosophy.The responsible intellectual cannot demand that they immediately
explode/abandon all their systems but must continually remind them they are
engaging in this oversimplification and system-building.It may be natural but can easily go too
far.The intellectual’s job, at the risk
of sounding like a curmudgeonly killjoy, is largely to make sure people don’t get carried away.

It’s not that we skeptics are just callous naysayers.For a skeptic like me, watching humanity try
to navigate reality on the basis of faith is about as nerve-wracking as
watching Nik Wallenda tightrope-walk without a tether across the Grand Canyon for
about twenty-three minutes last night, constantly thanking God for his
survival.So far so good, but...

P.S. Of course, if your system is merely art or fiction, and
you admit that, most harm can be avoided.And so it is that a man can be very wary of government, religion,
mysticism, and gurus -- and still applaud things like the Troll Museum and
attendant Troll Stroll I saw on Saturday, with hosts Rev. Jen and her sidekick,
burlesque performer Scooter Pie.

Sure, it was odd, but was it that much stranger than the
systems that produced the giant shoe-shaped advertising truck I saw a few hours
earlier in Central Park -- or for that matter the truly pseudo-scientific holistic/organic lactose-free ice cream
truck for dogs parked nearby in the Park that day?